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Over de Auteur

E. Paul Durrenberger is emeritus professor of anthropology from the University of Iowa and Penn State University and recipient of the Society for Applied Anthropology's Malinowski Award for 2014. He has done fieldwork in tribal and peasant areas of Thailand, Iceland, and the United States and has toon meer published a number of academic papers and books, including The Anthropological Study of Class and Consciousness and The Anthropology of Labor Unions, and Gambling Debt. toon minder

Werken van E. Paul Durrenberger

Anthropology Unbound: A Field Guide to the 21st Century (2006) — Auteur — 13 exemplaren
The Anthropology of Iceland (1994) 10 exemplaren
Saga Of Havardur Of Isafjordur (1996) 7 exemplaren
Anthropology of Labor Unions (2010) 6 exemplaren

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I just finished reading Icelandic Essays: explorations in the anthropology of modern life, by E. Paul Durrenberger (1995). He begins his book with a quote:

"Long ago [1875] Richard Burton warned of a condition he labeled "Iceland on the brain," which overtakes some foreigners who get so romantically involved with Iceland that they see everything through rosy lenses."

I don't believe that this happened to W.H. Auden. To be honest, it has happened to me. But I anticipate that when I visit Iceland and fantasy becomes reality--rainy, cold weather and all--I will still be crazy about Iceland, even without rosy lenses. We'll see!

Durrenberger, let's call him Paul, explores the "Skipper Effect," Elves, the sagas and their effect (or lack of effect) on Icelandic society today, among other things. Paul, like Bill Holm, went to work on a remote farm in order to learn Icelandic. He went back time after time, because being an actual part of a working farm enabled him to not only to learn the language, but also to be able to draw anthropological conclusions based on personal experience and observation, rather than research removed from the source.

Paul has some unusual points of view as well as some ideas that I find a little reactionary. While I'm not an anthropologist, this book is geared toward the layperson. What I really liked about it is that it looks at Icelandic society from a very different perspective, and gave me a lot of fresh ideas to consider. His book could have benefited from some editing, but it is a very worthwhile read. You may not agree with everything he says, but you'll find many thought-provoking ideas.
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darienduke | Jul 29, 2008 |

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Werken
19
Leden
92
Populariteit
#202,476
Waardering
3.0
Besprekingen
1
ISBNs
48

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